DocumentCode
1090971
Title
Linear Time Delay Methods and Stability Analyses of the Human Spine. Effects of Neuromuscular Reflex Response
Author
Franklin, Timothy C. ; Granata, Kevin P. ; Madigan, Michael L. ; Hendricks, Scott L.
Author_Institution
Microsoft Corp., Redmond, WA
Volume
16
Issue
4
fYear
2008
Firstpage
353
Lastpage
359
Abstract
Linear stability methods were applied to a biomechanical model of the human musculoskeletal spine to investigate effects of reflex gain and reflex delay on stability. Equations of motion represented a dynamic 18 degrees-of-freedom rigid-body model with time-delayed reflexes. Optimal muscle activation levels were identified by minimizing metabolic power with the constraints of equilibrium and stability with zero reflex time delay. Muscle activation levels and associated muscle forces were used to find the delay margin, i.e., the maximum reflex delay for which the system was stable. Results demonstrated that stiffness due to antagonistic co-contraction necessary for stability declined with increased proportional reflex gain. Reflex delay limited the maximum acceptable proportional reflex gain, i.e., long reflex delay required smaller maximum reflex gain to avoid instability. As differential reflex gain increased, there was a small increase in acceptable reflex delay. However, differential reflex gain with values near intrinsic damping caused the delay margin to approach zero. Forward-dynamic simulations of the fully nonlinear time-delayed system verified the linear results. The linear methods accurately found the delay margin below which the nonlinear system was asymptotically stable. These methods may aid future investigations in the role of reflexes in musculoskeletal stability.
Keywords
biomechanics; damping; delays; muscle; neurophysiology; nonlinear systems; physiological models; antagonistic co-contraction; biomechanical model; damping; dynamic degrees-of-freedom rigid-body model; equations of motion; forward-dynamic simulations; human musculoskeletal spine; linear time delay methods; metabolic power; neuromuscular reflex response; nonlinear time-delayed system; reflex delay; reflex gain; stability analyses; Biological system modeling; delay effects; reflex; spine; stability; Computer Simulation; Humans; Linear Models; Models, Biological; Movement; Muscle, Skeletal; Neuromuscular Junction; Reflex; Spine;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1534-4320
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNSRE.2008.920080
Filename
4463639
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